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20 January 2014

I've left EtekChopper outside in the rain and cold for the past few months while I was busy doing Senior things like classes and thesis and grad school apps and stuff. Poor EtekChopper! It was under a tarp, but still! Now that some of my own hardware has started to rust, and now that I know it can move around on its own power, it's time to strip it down and clean it up for a final rebuild. No rust, no janky mounts, no zipties, nice insulated electronics, etc. Let's begin!I'm very pleased to say I've joined the MIT Electric Vehicle Team (EVT) and they have graciously allowed me to work on the motorcycle into their laboratory space!!! Now I can disassemble the bike without the risk of people from outside stealing parts. Plus, there's a bit more room to leave parts in a corner than there is at MITERS (which is conveniently located downstairs). Things I want to do over the next few weeks:

Strip all parts off

Remove ALL rust from the frame parts

Design and weld steel tabs to the frame for mounting and protecting

Motor

Batteries

Controller

Charger

Other components

Re-paint or powdercoat (YAY!) frame parts.

Reassemble bike

Fix front brake

Lower the bike to fit my short body. I'm only 5'8" and this is a pretty large bike.

Raise front fork as much as possible (lowers front of frame)

Adjust or replace rear suspension (lowers back of frame)

Clean the rest up.

First things first. I've started to remove everything off the motorcycle, and first comes the seat, gas tank, rear fender and light assembly, front light assembly. Then came out all the peripheral electronic components, Cycle Analyst, Throttle, Sevcon controller, wiring...

Then came the chain and rear wheel. And the batteries. And the motor.The frame is SO LIGHT NOW! I can move it around without much effort. The wheel assemblies on this thing really add on the weight.

I removed the rear shocks, footpegs, and swingarm. I'm going to have to probably get shorter shocks or make/buy my own lowering blocks. With the CNC mill working, I may just let it make the lowering blocks for me!

I decided I would inspect the front brake (currently non-functional). I opened up the oil reservoir to find a lot of gunk. Following this guide (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0X6BX05JAo0) I cleaned it out. I decided to leave it empty (and drain the line and caliper as well) until I re-assembled the whole thing.

Here I realized that the clamps for the front levers were where the mirrors mounted to! this rusted and sheared piece of bolt was the old mirror! I went to town trying to remove it. I Dremel-ed a slot on the top and tried to use a flathead screwdriver to remove it. I ended up breaking the screwdriver! Even after torching the area (The aluminum clamp would expand more than the steel bolt) and wailing on it with WD40, the thing would not come out.

I ended up drilling a hole into the bolt and using a screw extractor, which got a little out of hand when the thing wouldn't budge, until it finally...

CRACKed, taking a piece of the clamp before it would move. I used a Dremel to remove as much bolt material as I could (I feel like a surgeon now). I then squeezed the sides of the bolt together and pulled it out. The threads seemed mostly intact, though...

And sure enough, I could get the mirror onto there! I can see behind me! Turns out there are two axes of rotational adjustment: The angle of the brake lever clamp on the handlebar (adjusts it vertically) and the angle of the mirror on the clamp itself (adjusts it horizontally).Now if I can only find where I put the clutch clamp, which can hold my left-hand mirror... :x

Now it's time to take apart the front fork. First comes the wheel...

Then the forks and handlebar. Easy enough.At this point, I need to finalize where I need to weld tabs that will hold my batteries, controller, fairings, DCDC converter, and provide additional bracing for the motor.

The motor mounting tabs were easy enough to design/make. I just cut some steel L-channel to size, and used a grinding wheel to shape the channels to fit the frame tubes and other bits. These will come out really nice with a MIG welder.

Now, the batteries. I've decided to NOT use these two 12S8P packs, even though they have a nice BMS and pakage. The truth is, these batteries are unsafe in this cramped mounting position. If I move it far back enough to clear the front wheel and fender while the fork suspension is fully compressed, I cannot mount the plastic rear fender (which protects the components in front of the rear wheel). If I move the batteries far enough forward to mount that protective plastic fender (I have to squish the plastic battery case a bit against the steel frame), the batteries come dangerously close to the front wheel and fender. With a max front shock compression of ~5.5", there's no way the battery can clear the front suspension. Something has to change. Enter the smaller 12S4P pack that is available to me via an extremely generous donation. 4 of these packs is equivalent to the two 12S8P long packs I've been testing with, but they are each in a package that is half the size as well. This leads to more (and better!) options for storing the batteries on the motorcycle frame.

After playing around with them, I found I was able to fit eight (8!!! Double the original capacity!) of the 12S4P battery packs in the front of the motorcycle in a clean and consistent space. Look at how elegant that is! I will only be using 6 packs though, for a total of 24S12P. (150% original capacity, 288 cells, 720 Ah, ~ 45 miles of range!)To fasten these packs I need to design steel mounting brackets to be welded onto the frame. I'm going to add about 0.5" of padding/buffer/armor to each side of the battery to provide some cushioning and protection from rocks/shrapnel that may penetrate the battery pack and short something. I can't design the specifics of this until I have the 6 battery packs, so I will simply design it for a box of 3x2 of the 12S4P packs, with an additional 0.5" on each size. I plan to cut cardboard into a box of this size, then design mounting channels in the frame using steel L-channel to allow that box to easily slide into the channel from one side, then clamp down using webbing or some other type of clamping method.

An interlude: I have to thinking about the painting process. The problem with the process is many things have to happen quickly after eachother, or the frame will oxidize or the primer/paint will not hold corrctly. I'm going to follow these basic steps:

17 January 2014

Last we left off, the batteries and controller were ziptied to the frame for temporary testing, and the motor was mounted with a waterjet aluminum sprocket at only two points. The point of this is to get the bike to the point where I can ride it around and prove that everything will work. Then, I will take everything apart and put it back together in a clean, final, ziptie-less fashion.

The electronics and wiring were certainly a mess, but they will do for now. At least I have some idea for how many wires I'll have running around.

Next I decided to mount the new 56-tooth rear sprocket. I have drilled the proper mounting holes, but the main hole where the axle passes through is too small.

Using the indexing head on the mill, i was able to mill out the proper sized hole to mount the rear sprocket.

And on she goes! With all the torque my friend Adam and I can muster. That's 100ft-lbs, right?

I mounted the motor sprocket (I flipped it over from the way it is shown here). I cut a piece of keystock I found lying around MITERS to the proper length, and cranked down the beefy setscrews to the shaft of the Etek.

Next came installing the new chain. I moved the rear wheel as far forward as I could in the chain tensioning slots (to ensure a loose chain) and wrapped the chain around the entire front and rear sprocket. I placed the master link on one end, and pulled the other end on top and marked where I was going to cut it to size with a black sharpie.

The chain cut easily enough with an angle grinder, and the pin (shown intact above) fell out when I cut down on one en long enough.

Now all I had to do is place the master link through the chain...

Et voila! The chain is attached and I can move the rear wheel, and the motor turns!

The chain looked straight enough, but I am still worried about it not actually being straight, or it contacting the rear swingarm while running. I may want to make the front motor mount adjustable to ensure minimal misalignment and stress on the chain.

For now, this standoff on top and spacer on the bottom should suffice. The issue with this is when there's tension on the upper part of the chain, the whole mount will deflect and possibly oscillate. That's why there's a third (not visible in this picture) hole at the bottom left of the motor mount for putting a third brace of some kind. I will weld a tab onto the frame and drill a hole in that tab for the third standoff.

I installed the Cycle Analyst's shunt resistor on the negative terminal to the controller. I love working with large power bars, because that means my terminals and rails can be minimally structural! Look at those aluminum/copper bus bars! :D

The speedometer of the Cycle Analyst works with a hall sensor and a magnet. The sensor is attached to the front fork with zipties, and the magnet is epoxied to an unimportant part of the front brake disk.

After tying the Cycle Analysts's B- shunt probes and B+ probe to the appropriate wires, I turned the motorcycle on to find this! Way cool! I ran the initial setup routine, which included inputting the front wheel circumference and other options.

To test the speedometer, I lifted the front wheel up and employed the help of fellow MITERS-folk Charles Franklin who is making a really nice scooter of his own! His scooter theoretically goes about 20-25 mph, so if we push his drive wheel into mine and run it, my speedo should read about the same.

And so it does! (It reads negative Ah used because I had the shunt terminals backwards...) With everything in place, it's time for a quick test of my system in the parking lot outside MITERS!

Hand-me-down helmet, no jacket, no boots, no lights, no front brake (The rear drum brake works fine though!). Safety third! (Please don't do stupid things like I do, or you may end up like this poor bastard).

Well, here goes nothing!

It all works alright, but there seems to be some shaking/vibration when there it too much torque being applied by the motor. I'd attribute it to loose electrical connections, or the motor mount needing further constraint. Either way, I'll tackle the issue later. For now, the entire system works well enough for me!

The chain sound is normal, though it sounds pretty nasty. Turns out the original internal combustion engine was enough to drown out the sound of chain. Other electric motorcycles sound the same, so I'm not too worried about it. That may be why Zero Motorcycles use belt drive for their ECycles. When I kick it up and rev it though, it sounds soooooo cool! :D I can't wait to get on this thing and really feel the amps working underneath me.

I purchased an inexpensive cover for it before the fall 2013 semester got tough, and here it remained until January 2014. Next up is tearing it apart and cleaning/welding mounting tabs/repainting everything!

13 January 2014

Whew, it's BEEN A WHILE! Everything in this post happened in August 2013.

While I've gotten a lot done in the past few months, I've been too busy being a MechE senior and doing the grad school application and getting A's in my classes thing to document it. Since I've been overhauling work on my motorcycle, and have actually written a couple of unpublished, more recent posts than this one, it's time to finish documenting everything that's happened since I got my Sevcon Gen4 working.

Time to start making my modifications! First I want to replace the rear sprocket, which involves removing the rear wheel, remove the sprocket, and measuring the mounting holes to either order or waterjet my own.

I was going to order a 56-tooth #50 sprocket for the rear sprocket, but turns out MITERS had one in the "Absurdly Large Round Things" drawer! SERENDIPITY!

First came off the rear lights/fender assembly, and the black plastic fender (which seems to protect the engine/electronics from rocks and stuff coming off the rear wheel.)

next came off the rear wheel, but now I have this chain to deal with... I ordered a new chain of the proper size, so this one needs to come off. Thing is, there's no "master link" on standard motorcycle chain, and the only way to remove the chain is to remove the rear swingarm. I had a better idea...

Now to remove the original sprocket from the rear wheel for measurement. There is a pattern of 4 holes, each spaced 5.5mm from the center.

The mounting holes of the 56-tooth sprocket I found are nothing like those of the CB750K rear wheel, though, so I used our mill+indexing head to make the proper mounting holes.

Now came the challenge of mounting the batteries.

Zipties should work just fine until I can design and weld steel tabs, right?! =]

Issue is the batteries come dangerously close to both the rear wheel...

... AND the front wheel/fender. I'll need to address this soon.

I made a motor mount using everyone's favorite 2D H2O-based rapid manufacturing device.

And in came the motor and electronics!

Time to test out the motor +throttle on the bike itself >:)

Now THAT's a motorcycle! More details on system integration coming soon...